NOVANEWS
by Stephen Lendman
Since taking office in January 2009, Obama broke every major campaign promise, including relevant ones to his May 19 Middle East speech; namely:
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– “hope;”
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– “change;”
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– peace;
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– democratic values;
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– closing Guantanamo in one year;
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– ending torture, illegal spying, and detention without trial;
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– “a new era of openness;”
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– willingness to meet individually with Iranian, Syrian, Venezuelan, Cuban, and North Korean leaders;
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– supporting Israeli and Palestinian efforts to “fulfill their national goals: two states living side by side in peace and security;” and
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– on Afghanistan saying (October 27, 2007): “I will promise you this, that if we have not gotten our troops out by the time I am president, it is the first thing I will do. I will get our troops home. We will bring an end to this (and the Iraq) war(s). You can take that to the bank,” and by implication not begin new ones.
Instead, his rhetoric belied his policy, spurning democracy, civil liberties, human rights, and rule of law principles. He doubled down George Bush with:
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– imperial Iraq and Afghan wars;
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– two others against Pakistan and Libya;
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– another allied with Israel against Palestine;
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– regional support for subservient despots; as well as
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– anti-populist proxy wars in Somalia, Central Africa, Yemen, Bahrain, Haiti, Honduras, Colombia, and at home against Muslims, Latino immigrants, and working Americans.
Make no mistake. People across the Middle East aren’t fooled, unlike many Americans no matter how many times they’re betrayed.
Ahead of his speech on May 18, Washington Post writer Scott Wilson headlined, “Obama faces pressure from allies on eve of speech Thursday on Middle East policy,” saying:
US allies want more decisive action “on several volatile issues in the Middle East and North Africa, including the armed rebellion in Libya, the uprising in Syria, and the moribund peace process between Israel and the Palestinians.”
On May 19, New York Times writer Michael Shear headlined, “Obama’s Middle East Speech Has Many American Audiences,” saying:
He aimed at a domestic and global audience, trying “to construct a cohesive narrative for American voters about his administration’s (unsuccessful) efforts in the region,” notably:
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– the stalled peace process;
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– continuing Bush-era policies; and
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– failure to address Arab uprisings constructively.